Where:
Online
32 Quincy Street
Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138
Admission:
FREE
Categories:
Art
Event website:
https://bit.ly/3uh9QB4
Maeve Miller ’22 and Adam Sella ’22 examine how photography was used as a tool to promote ideas of racial justice in the years during and around the American Civil War. Engaging with issues such as the legibility of race and the social and political stakes of representation, their tour looks closely at two examples: Freedom’s Banner. Charley, A Slave Boy from New Orleans (1864) by Charles Paxson and a portrait of the great abolitionist Frederick Douglass by an unidentified photographer.
This interactive tour will take place online via Zoom. To join, click the following link: https://harvard.zoom.us/j/96339250264 (free admission; no pre-registration required).
Virtual Student Guide Tours take place every Thursday at 8pm and every Saturday at 11am on Zoom. Each tour is unique and offers a chance to explore the collections of the Harvard Art Museums through the eyes of a Harvard student. Drop in and join the conversation!
For instructions on how to join a meeting on Zoom, click here. For general questions about Student Guide Tours, email [email protected].
This program is supported by the Ho Family Student Guide Fund.
The Ho Family Student Guide Program at the Harvard Art Museums trains students to develop original, research-based tours of the collections. These tours, designed and led by Harvard undergraduates from a range of academic disciplines, focus on objects chosen by each Student Guide and offer a unique, thematic view into the collections.
Saturday, Dec 21, 2024 11:00a
Crystal Ballroom at Somerville Theatre